| abaca abaka | the Manila-hemp plant, or its fiber. |
| absinth absinthe | the wormwood plant or other species of Artemisia; a liqueur made from this. |
| abutilon | a plant of the mallow family. [Arabic aubutilun]. |
| acanth acanthus | a genus of herbaceous prickly plants > ACANTHUSES or ACANTHI. |
| achillea | a plant of the yarrow genus. [From Gk. Achilleus, Achilles]. |
| achimenes | a genus of herbaceous perennnial plants > ACHIMENES. |
| acidanthera | a white-flowered plant of NE Africa. |
| aconite aconitum | the monk's-hood or wolf's-bane plant. |
| adderwort | the common BISTORT, aka SNAKEWEED. |
| adjigo | a plant native to Australia that has edible tubers, aka yam plant. |
| agapanthus | a genus of lily native to S. Africa > AGAPANTHUSES. |
| agave | any of numerous spiny-leaved plants of the American genus Agave. |
| ageratum | a genus of plants, one popular species of which has lavender-blue flowers in dense clusters. [NL, ultimately from Greek ageraton something which does not grow old]. |
| agrimony | a perennial herb of a genus (Agrimonia) of the rose family. |
| agrostemma | a European caryophyllaceous plant, aka CORNCOCKLE > AGROSTEMMAS or AGROSTEMMATA. |
| agueweed | a North American gentianaceous plan, that has clusters of pale blue-violet or white flowers; also, another name for BONESET. |
| ajuga | a genus of plants, including BUGLE. |
| aka | a New Zealand vine. |
| akatea | a New Zealand vine with white flowers. |
| alecost | a garden plant having a strong balsamic smell, nearly allied to tansy. Aka COSTMARY. |
| alfilaria alfileria | a Californian weed, aka pin grass. [Sp. alfilerro, from alfiler, pin]. Aka FILAREE. |
| alisma | a plant of the water-plantain genus. [Gk. alisma, water-plantain]. |
| alison | a plant of the Alyssum genus of low-growing, cruciferous plants, aka ALYSSUM. |
| alizari | levantine MADDER. Cf. ALIZARIN. |
| alkanet alkannin | a wild flower; a reddish plant-based dye obtained from this. |
| allheal | a herb with curative properties. |
| allium | a plant of the Allium genus to which onions, garlics, leeks etc. belong. |
| allseed | a weed of the flax family. |
| alocasia | any of various tropical plants of the genus Alocasia. |
| alsike | a kind of clover. |
| althaea althea | a genus of plants of the mallow family, that includes the garden hollyhock. |
| alumroot | any of several North American plants of the saxifragaceous genus Heuchera, having small white, reddish, or green bell-shaped flowers and astringent roots; the root of such a plant. |
| alyssum | a plant of the Alyssum genus of low-growing, cruciferous plants. |
| amaracus | marjoram > AMARACUSES. [L. amaracus]. |
| amarant amaranth | a reddish-purple flower that never fades. |
| amarantin | of or like AMARANTH. |
| amaryllid | any member of the AMARYLLIS family. |
| amaryllis | the belladonna lily, or any of several similar plants. [Amaryllis, a girl's name in the Greek and Latin poets and others]. |
| ambari ambary | a fibre-yielding plant of E. Indies, aka KENAF. |
| amomum | a plant of the ginger family native to Asia and Africa. [Gk. amomon, probably cardamom]. |
| amsinckia | a Californian herb. |
| anacharis | a fresh-water weed of the frog's-bit family, native to America > ANACHARISES. |
| anchusa | a plant of the borage family. |
| anemone | any member of the genus Anemone of the crowfoot family. |
| angelica | a white flower, used in cooking and medicine. [ML. herba angelica, angelic herb]. |
| anglepod | a flowering plant. |
| anil | indigo, the plant or dye. |
| anise | an annual Mediterranean plant of the carrot family. |
| anthurium | a tropical American plant. |
| antirrhinumum | a garden flower, aka SNAPDRAGON. |
| apiaceous | parsley-like. |
| aquilegia | a genus of plants including columbine. |
| arabis | any member of a large genus of trailing plants. |
| arachis | a Brazilian plant genus that includes monkey-nut. |
| aralia | a genus of ivy-like plants. |
| arethusa | a kind of orchid. [From Arethusa, a girl turned into a fountain by Artemis]. |
| argemone | a plant of the prickly poppy genus. [Gk. argemone, a kind of poppy]. |
| arnica | a genus of plants including the mountain tobacco; a tincture obtained from mountain tobacco used for bruises, etc. |
| aristolochia | any plant of the birthwort genus Aristolochia. |
| aroid | any plant of the ARUM family. |
| arrowgrass | either of two species, sea arrowgrass or marsh arrowgrass, of monocotyledonous perennials having long thin fleshy leaves and spikes of inconspicuous flowers. |
| arrowhead | an aquatic plant. |
| arrowroot | a W. Indian plant with fleshy tuberous rhizomes; a pure edible starch made from this. |
| artemisia | a plant, sagebrush and wormwood, named for Artemis, to whom it was sacred. |
| arum | a large-spathed plant, aka 'cuckoo-pint' or 'lords and ladies'. |
| asclepiad asclepias | an American plant of the milkweed genus > ASCLEPIASES. [Gk. asklepias, swallow-wort]. |
| asphodel | a plant of the lily family; in literature, the flower of the Elysian fields. |
| aster | a plant of the Aster genus of Compositae, with large showy flowers. |
| astilbe | a garden flower. |
| astrantia | a plant of the Astrantia genus of hardy, perennial umbelliferous plants with showy petal-like bracts. |
| astrofell astrophel | an unidentified bitter starlike plant, possibly aster. |
| atamasco | a plant of the south-eastern US, bearing a single white lily-like flower > ATAMASCOS. |
| aubretia aubrieta aubrietia | any of several dwarf trailing cruciferous plants of the genus Aubrieta, usu. bearing violet or purple flowers. |
| auricula | a species of Primula, or primrose, aka, from the shape of its leaves, bear's-ear > AURICULAE or AURICULAS. |
| avens | a wild flower > AVENSES. N.B. no AVEN*. |
| awlwort | an aquatic plant with awl-shaped leaves. |
| axseed | a European herb. |
| baldmoney | a wild flower, aka MEU, SPIGNEL or SPICKNEL. |
| baneberry | a black poisonous berry, the fruit of the ranunculaceous plant Actaea spicata; the plant itself. |
| baptisia | a genus of N. American leguminous plants. |
| barbasco | any of a variety of S. American plants, the roots of which are used to make fish-poison etc > BARBASCOS or BARBASCOES. |
| barilla | the alkali plant, Salsola soda; an impure alkali made by burning this. |
| barrenwort | an herbaceous plant of the Barberry family. |
| bartsia | a wild flower. |
| basil | a kind of herb. |
| bearberry | a trailing plant of the heath family, having leaves which are tonic and astringent, and glossy red berries of which bears are said to be fond. |
| bearbine | a bindweed. |
| beargrass | a N. American plant. |
| bedstraw | any of numerous straggling plants of the genus Galium, belonging to the madder family and bearing many tiny flowers. |
| beggarweed | any of various plants, such as KNOTWEED, SPURREY or DODDER, that grows on waste ground. |
| begonia | a garden plant with waxy leaves and ornamental flowers. |
| bellbind | hedge or field bindweed. |
| bellflower | another name for CAMPANULA. |
| bellwort | a genus of plants with yellowish bell-shaped flowers. |
| beni benne benni | sesame, a plant native to SE Asia, producing seeds used as food and yielding an edible oil. |
| bennet | as in herb bennet, another name for AVENS. |
| bergenia | any of various perennial plants of the genus Bergenia, of the saxifrage family. [From K. A. von Bergen, Ger. physician & botanist]. |
| berseem | a kind of clover. |
| betony | a wild flower with a spike of reddish-purple flowers, formerly used in dyeing. |
| bindweed | any of various weeds that trail along the ground and twine themselves around other plants. |
| birdseye | a kind of primrose. |
| birdsfoot | a papilionaceous genus of plants with clawlike pods. |
| birthroot | an herbaceous plant with an astringent rootstock, said to have medicinal properties. |
| birthwort | a plant formerly reputed to help parturition. |
| bishopweed | another name for GOUTWEED. |
| bisnaga biznaga | a type of cactus. |
| bistort | a plant with a twisted astringent root. Aka ADDERWORT, SNAKEWEED. |
| bittercress | one of several perennial or annual cruciferous plants of the genus Cardamine. |
| bittersweet | the woody nightshade, whose roots if chewed first tast bitter, then sweet. |
| bitterweed | any of various plants containign a bitter-tasting substance. |
| biznaga | see BISNAGA. |
| blackboy | an Australian plant of the lily family. |
| blawort blewart | the harebell; the corn bluebottle. |
| blite | a genus of herbs with a fleshy calyx. |
| bloodroot | a plant with a red root and red sap, and bearing a pretty, white flower in early spring, aka PUCCOON, REDROOT. |
| bloodwort | a plant with a red dye in the roots. |
| bloomer | a flower that blooms in a specified way e.g. a night bloomer |
| blowball | the downy seed head of a dandelion, which children delight to blow away. |
| blueball | a medicinal herb. |
| bluebell | in S England, the wood hyacinth; in Scotland and N England, the harebell. |
| bluecurls | a North American plant. No BLUECURL*. |
| bluet | any of various blue-flowered plants; esp. the cornflower. |
| blueweed | a bristly weed. |
| bogbean | a wild flower. |
| boltonia | a perennial herb. |
| boneset | a medicinal plant, aka THOROUGHWORT, with diaphoretic and tonic properties. |
| borage | a rough-stemmed herb used in salads. |
| bouvardia | a flowering plant. |
| boxberry | the wintergreen. |
| briony bryony | any of several herbaceous climbing plants. |
| bromelia bromeliad | any plant of the genus Bromelia, that includes pineapples. |
| brooklime | a wild flower with small blue flowers. |
| brookweed | a small white-flowered herb found usually in wet places; aka water pimpernel. |
| broomrape | a parasitic plant. |
| browallia | a flowering plant. |
| bryony | see BRIONY. |
| buckbean | a marsh plant. |
| bugbane | a perennial white-flowered herb of the order Ranunculaceae, aka BUGWORT. |
| bugleweed | a plant of the mint family, having mild narcotic and astringent properties. |
| bugloss | a wild flower, with bristly stem and vivid blue flowers. |
| bugseed | an annual herb. |
| bugwort | a perennial white-flowered herb of the order Ranunculaceae, aka BUGBANE. |
| bullbrier | a prickly American vine. |
| bullweed | knapweed. |
| bulrushy | full of bulrushes. |
| buplever | a plant, hare's ear. |
| burdock | a dandelion-like plant. |
| burseed | a coarse weed. |
| burweed | any of various burry plants such as BURDOCK. |
| butterbur | a plant of damp places with very broad leaves. |
| buttercup | a crowfoot (genus Ranunculus), esp of one of those species that have golden-yellow cup-shaped flowers. |
| butterwort | a genus of low insectivorous plants. |
| cabomba | an aquatic plant. |
| cactus | a succulent plant of the family Cactaceae, with thick fleshy stems, usu. spiny and without leaves > CACTI or CACTUSES. |
| calabash | a gourd-bearing vine; a dish made from the gourd. |
| caladium | any tropical plant of the genus Caladium, of the arum family, the plants of which are grown for their attractive foliage. [Malay keladi]. |
| calamint | a genus of labiate aromatic plants allied to mint and thyme. |
| calanthe | an orchid of the genus Calanthe, having tall spikes of long-lasting flowers. [Gk. kalos, beautiful + anthe, blossom]. |
| calathea | a showy indoor plant. |
| calceolaria | any plant of the S American genus Calceolaria, the plants of which are largely cultivated for the beauty of their slipperlike flowers. |
| calendula | a marigold. |
| calla | a genus of plants, of the order Araceae. |
| calliopsis | a genus of herbaceous composite plants, mostly America. Also COREOPSIS. |
| calluna | any plant of the genus CALLUNA, ling. |
| caltha | a genus of plants including the marsh marigold. |
| calycanthus | the Carolina allspice or strawberry shrub, a North American shrub. |
| camas camash camass quamash | a blue-flowered liliaceous plant of northwestern America, the bulbs of which are collected for food by the Indians. |
| camelia camellia | a showy flower. |
| camomile chamomile | a creeping aromatic plant of the composite family, with yellow-centred white-rayed flowers, formerly much grown for its fragrance. |
| campanula | a plant of the Campanula genus, commonly known as bellflowers or bells, the best-known being the harebell or Scottish bluebell. |
| campion | any plant of the genera Lychnis and Silene having usu pink or white star- or salver-shaped flowers with notched petals. |
| canaigre | a large Texan dock, whose root is used in tanning. |
| candelilla | a Mexican wax-yielding spurge. |
| candock | the yellow water lily. |
| candytuft | a cruciferous plant of the genus Iberis, with flowers in tufts or corymbs, the outer petals larger than the inner. |
| canna | a tropical lily with showy red or yellow flowers > CANNAE or CANNAS. [L. canna, reed]. |
| caprifoil caprifole | honeysuckle. |
| caraway carraway | an umbelliferous plant with aromatic seeds used as a tonic and condiment. |
| cardamine | a genus of cruciferous plants. [Gk. kardamine, from kardamon, cress]. |
| cardon | a variety of cactus. |
| cardoon | a thistle-like plant. |
| carduus | a kind of thistle > CARDUUSES. |
| carline | any plant of the genus Carlina closely related to the true thistles, especially the carline thistle. |
| carnation | a double-flowering cultivated variety of the clove pink. |
| carraway | see CARAWAY. |
| casava cassava | a tropical plant whose roots yield a valuable starch. |
| catananche | any of the hardy perennial genus Catananche, from S Europe; some, esp. C. caerulea, are grown for their blue-and-white flowers that can be dried as winter decoration. |
| catchfly | a name for a species of campion (Lychnis viscaria) and several bladder campion (genus Silene) with sticky stems. |
| catchweed | goosegrass or cleavers. |
| catmint catnep catnip | a mint-like plant attractive to cats. |
| cattail | any of various plants with long thin parts suggestive of cats' tails, esp. the reed-mace. |
| cattleya | a kind of orchid. [From William Cattley, English botanist]. |
| cebadilla sabadilla cevadilla | a liliaceous plant, yielding the alkaloid veratrine. [Sp. cebada, barley]. |
| celandine | either of two plants (greater celandine, Chelidonium majus, and lesser celandine, Ranunculus ficaria) supposed to flower when the swallows came, and to perish when they went. |
| celosia | a flowering plant. |
| centaurea | a large genus of composite plants, related to the thistles and including the cornflower or bluebottle. |
| centaury | a plant of the genus Centaurium, of the gentian family, usu. with pink flowers. |
| cerastium | any low ground-covering plant of the genus Cerastium, that includes the alpine mouse-ear chickweed. |
| cereus | a genus of plants of the Cactus family. They are natives of America, from California to Chili. [L. cereus waxen, wax-taper (from their stiff form)]. |
| cetywall setwall setuale | valerian, a plant formerly valued for its restorative qualities. |
| cevadilla | see CEBADILLA. |
| chamomile | see CAMOMILE. |
| chara | a genus of flowerless wetland plants, having articulated stems and whorled branches: stoneworts etc. |
| charlock | a weedy plant with yellow flowers. |
| chay chaya shaya | an Indian plant of the madder family whose root chayroot yields a red dye. [Tamil saya]. |
| checkerbloom | a Californian malvaceous plant with pink or purple flowers. |
| chelone | a genus of hardy perennial flowering plants, natives of North America. |
| chenopod | any dicotyledonous flowering plant of the family Chenopodiaceae, the goosefoots. |
| chervil | a wild umbellifer. |
| chia | a Mexican herb. |
| chicalote | a poppy of the SW US. |
| chiccory chickory chicory | succory, a blue-flowered composite plant. |
| chickweed | any plant of the genus Stellaria. |
| chive cive | a herb of the onion family. CHIVE can also be a verb: to knife. |
| chrysanth | chrysanthemum. |
| cicely | an umbelliferous plant. |
| cicoree | a perennial herb. |
| cicuta | the hemlock plant. |
| cilantro | coriander > CILANTROS. |
| cineraria | any of various garden hybrids, with corymbs of daisy-like blue, purple, etc., flower-heads, grown as pot plants. |
| cistus | any plant of the rock rose genus. [Gk. kistos, rock rose]. |
| cive | a herb of the onion family. |
| claddie | a native New Zealand flax plant, aka KORARI. |
| clarkia | any plant of the N American genus Clarkia, a favourite border plant. |
| clary | any plant of the genus Salvia sclarea, sometimes used as a culinary herb, |
| claytonia | an American genus of perennial herbs with delicate blossoms, aka spring beauty. |
| clearweed | a nettle-like plant. |
| cleavers clivers | goose-grass. |
| cleome | an aromatic plant with white or purplish flowers. |
| clivers | see CLEAVERS. |
| clivia | a leek-like S.African plant. [From Lady Margaret Clive]. |
| clote clotbur cocklebur | the burdock. |
| cloudberry | a low-growing plant with an amber fruit known as BAKEAPPLE. |
| clover | any papilionaceous plant of the genus Trifolium. |
| clovered | covered with CLOVER. |
| clovery | like clover. |
| clow | = CLOVE. A clow-flower is a gillyflower. |
| clusia | any member of the genus Clusia of evergreen climbing plants. |
| cocklebur | see CLOTE. |
| cohosh | a perennial American herb whose rootstock is used in medicine. |
| colchicum | a genus of bulbous-rooted plants including the meadow saffron > COLCHICA or COLCHICUMS. [L. from Gk. kolchikon, meadow saffron, neuter of Kolchikos, relating to Kolchis, the sorceress Medea's country]. |
| cole | a plant of the Brassica or Cabbage genus; esp. that form of B. oleracea called rape and coleseed. |
| coleseed | the common rape or cole. |
| coleus | a plant of several species of the Mint family, cultivated for its bright-colored or variegated leaves. [Gk. koleos, a sheath]. |
| colewort | a variety of cabbage in which the leaves never form a compact head. |
| colicroot | a herb of the Bloodwort family, with small yellow or white flowers in a long spike. |
| colicweed | any of various plants of genus Corydalis. |
| collinsia | a North American plant of the scrophulariaceous genus Collinsia, having blue, white, or purple flowers. |
| colocynth | a cucurbitaceous plant with bitter-tasting gourds. [Gk. kolokynthis]. Also COLOQUINTIDA. |
| coltsfoot | a composite plant (Tussilago farfara) with a shaggy stalk and large soft leaves. |
| coltwood | perhaps a plant with shaggy stalk and large soft leaves. |
| columbine | a flower, aka aquilegia. |
| columnea | a flowering plant. |
| comfrey | a wild flower. |
| conium | a genus of biennial, poisonous, white-flowered, umbelliferous plants, bearing ribbed fruit and decompound leaves. |
| copihue | a climbing vine. |
| coralroot | a kind of orchid. |
| coralwort | a cruciferous herb of certain species of Dentaria; aka TOOTHWORT. |
| coreopsis | a genus of herbaceous composite plants, mostly American. |
| coriander | a plant yielding seeds used in medical and in curries and pickles. |
| cornflag | another name for a GLADIOLUS. |
| corydalis | a climbing plant. |
| cosmea | a plant of the genus COSMOS. |
| costmary | a garden plant having a strong balsamic smell, and nearly allied to tansy, used as a pot herb and salad plant and in flavoring ale and beer. Aka ALECOST. |
| cowage cowhage cowitch | a leguminous climbing plant with crooked pods covered with sharp stinging hairs. [Hindi kavach]. |
| cowbane | a poisonous plant. |
| cowbind | a species of bryony. |
| cowgrass | perennial red clover. |
| cowhage | see COWAGE. |
| cowherb | a European flowering plant related to the carnation. |
| cowitch | see COWAGE. |
| cowpea | the seed of one or more leguminous plants of the genus Dolichos; also, the plant itself. |
| cowslip | a species of primrose (Primula veris), with fragrant yellow flowers arranged in umbels. |
| crazyweed | a plant the consumption of which drives cattle mad, aka LOCOWEED. |
| creamcups | a California annual of the poppy family > CREAMCUPS. N.B. no CREAMCUP*. |
| crinkleroot | any of several species of TOOTHWORT. |
| crinum | a family of tropical plants. [Gk. krinon, a lily]. |
| crocine | pertaining to the CROCUS. |
| crocosmia | any plant of the genus Crocosmia, including MONTBRETIA. |
| crocus | a kind of flower > CROCUSES or CROCI. |
| crosswort | a BEDSTRAW with leaves set crosswise. |
| croton | a plant, yielding an acrid oil used as a purgative. [Gk. kroton, a sheep-tick, which the seed resembles]. |
| crowfoot | a wild flower, aka buttercup or spearwort > CROWFEET or CROWFOOTS. |
| cudweed | a woolly composite plant of the genus Gnaphalium. |
| cumbungi | a tall Australian marsh plant. |
| cumin cummin | an umbelliferous plant of the Mediterranean region with seeds like caraway. |
| cunjevoi | a tall Australian plant of the arum family whose corms were formerly cooked as food; also, a kind of sea squirt found on Australian reefs and rocks and used as bait. |
| curcuma | any plant of the genus Curcuma (of the ginger family), especially C. longa yielding turmeric. [Arabic kurkum]. |
| cyclamen | a plant of the S European Cyclamen genus. |
| cymbidium | a family of orchids > CYMBIDIUMS or CYMBIDIA. |
| cytisus | a plant of the broom genus > CYTISI. |
| daffodil | a yellow-flowered narcissus. Also DAFFODILLY, DAFFADOWNDILLY. |
| dagga | Indian hemp; also, an African labiate plant smoked as a narcotic. |
| dahlia | a showy garden flower. [From Andreas Dahl (1751-89), Swed. botanist]. |
| daisied | covered with daisies. |
| daisy | a composite wild or garden plant, with a yellow disc and white rays. |
| damewort | a cruciferous plant, remarkable for its fragrance, especially toward the close of the day. |
| dandelion | a common yellow-flowered composite with jagged-toothed leaves. |
| datura | a genus of solanaceous plants, with large funnel-shaped flowers and a four-celled, capsular fruit. [Hindi dhatura]. |
| daturic | relating to DATURA, a genus of solanaceous plants. |
| dayflower | a genus consisting mostly of tropical perennial herbs, having ephemeral flowers. |
| daylily | a liliaceous plant genus, whose flowers last for one day only. |
| dayshell | a thistle. |
| deerweed | a bushlike herb. |
| dentaria | any plant of the genus Dentaria, including the cruciferous toothwort. |
| derris | a vine yielding ROTENONE, that can be used as an insecticide. |
| desmodium | a plant of the telegraph-plant genus > DESMODIUMS. |
| dianthus | a genus of plants including the pink, carnation, and Sweet William > DIANTHUSES. |
| diascia | a plant of the genus Diascia, native to southern Africa, cultivated for its colourful, pink flowers. |
| dicentra | a genus of herbaceous plants, with racemes of two-spurred or heart-shaped flowers. [Gk. di- double + kentron, a point, spur]. |
| dichondra | a genus of tropical perennial herbs of the morning glory family. |
| dielytra | an erroneous name for DICENTRA, a genus of herbaceous plants. |
| dill | an umbelliferous herb related to parsnip, the fruits of which are used in condiments and as a carminative. |
| disa | an African orchid, with dark green leaves. |
| dittander | a pungent cruciferous plant, aka PEPPERWORT. |
| dittany | a plant of the mint family, a native of Crete. |
| dock docken | a polygonaceous weed of genus Rumex. |
| dodder | a parasitic plant; (verb) to walk unsteadily or falteringly, totter. |
| dogbane | a small genus of perennial herbaceous plants, with poisonous milky juice, bearing slender pods pods in pairs. |
| dogberry | the berry of the dogwood. |
| doronicum | a flower, leopard's-bane. |
| dragonroot | a North American aroid plant, Arisaema dracontium, having a greenish spathe and a long pointed spadix; the tuberous root of this plant, formerly used in medicine. |
| dropwort | a wild flower, a species of Spiraea. |
| duckweed | any of various tiny aquatic plants belonging to the genus Lemna. |
| dulcamara | a flower of the potato family, aka BITTERSWEET. [L. dulcis, sweet + amara, bitter]. |
| dumbcane | a poisonous tropical plant. |
| dwale | deadly nightshade. [ON dvöl, dvali delay, sleep]. |
| earthnut | an umbelliferous plant, aka PIGNUT. |
| echeveria | a kind of succulent plant. |
| echinacea | a plant of the genus Echinaceae. |
| echium | any plant of the genus ECHIUM. |
| edelweiss | a white Alpine flower of the composite family. [G. edel, noble + weiss, white]. |
| eelgrass | any of several submerged marine flowering plants with ribbon-like leaves, aka ZOSTERA. |
| eelwrack | a grasslike flowering plant of the pondweed family. |
| elodea | an American genus of Hydrocharitaceae, to which the Canadian waterweed belongs. |
| emlets | as in blood-drop emlets, a Chilean flower. No EMLET*. |
| epacrid epacris | a member of an Australian genus of heath-like plants. |
| epazote | a herb of the goosefoot family. |
| ephedra | a plant of the sea-grape genus. [Gk. ephedra, horsetail]. |
| epilobium | a genus of plants that includes willowherb. |
| episcia | a tropical American herb related to the African violet. |
| equisetum | a plant, horsetail. |
| eremurus | a flower, the foxtail lily > EREMURI or EREMURUSES. |
| erica | a genus of plants, heather. |
| erigeron | a plant of the genus Erigeron, fleabanes. [Gk. erigeron, groundsel, from eri, early + geron, old]. |
| eringo eryngo eryngium | a plant of the genus Eryngium, sea holly, reputed to be an aphrodisiac > ERINGOES or ERINGOS; ERYNGOES or ERYNGOS; ERYNGIUMS. |
| erinus | any rock plant of the genus Erinus. |
| erodium | a plant of the stork's-bill genus. [Gk. erodios, heron]. |
| ers | the bitter vetch > ERSES. |
| ervil | a European vetch. |
| eryngium | see ERINGO. |
| eryngo | see ERINGO. |
| estragon | a herb, aka TARRAGON. |
| eucharis | a plant of a genus of S. American bulbous plants with fragrant white flowers > EUCHARISES. [Gk. charming, from eu well + charis grace]. |
| eupatorium | any plant of the genus Eupatorium, of tropical America and the Caribbean, cultivated for their ornamental clusters of purple, pink, or white flowers > EUPATORIUMS. |
| euphorbia | any herb or shrub of the spurge family. |
| euphrasia euphrasy | a wild flower, eyebright. |
| exacum | any plant of the genus EXACUM. |
| eyebright | a wild flower, once used to treat disorders of the eyes. |
| fanwort | an aquatic plant. |
| felicia | any member of a S. African genus of herbs. [L. felix, happy]. |
| felwort | a flower of the Gentian family. |
| femetary femiter fenitar | the wild flower fumitory. |
| fennel | a yellow-flowered umbelliferous plant. |
| fennelflower | any of various species of Nigella with finely-divided leaves. |
| fenugreek | a kind of herb. [L. fenum graecum, Greek hay]. |
| feverfew | an aromatic plant. |
| feverroot | an American wild plant. |
| feverweed | a plant thought to be medicinal. |
| feverwort | a coarse American herb of the honeysuckle family. |
| figwort | a genus of herbaceous plants. |
| filaree | a Californian weed, aka pin grass. [Sp. alfilerro, from alfiler, pin]. Aka ALFILARIA. |
| fimble | light summer hemp, that bears no seed. |
| finnochio finocchio finochio | a dwarf variety of fennel. |
| fique | a tropical plant. |
| firepink | a flowering plant of the US. |
| fireweed | a flower, aka rosebay willowherb. |
| flax | the fibres of the plant Linum, which are woven to make linen cloth; the plant itself. |
| fleabane | a wild flower. |
| fleawort | a herb, formerly believed to destroy fleas. |
| fluellen | a weedy annual related to toadflax. |
| fluellin | a name given to various speedwells and toadflaxes. [Alt. of Welsh llysiau Llywelyn Llewelyn's herbs]. |
| foalfoot | a wild flower, aka COLTSFOOT. |
| foamflower | an American woodland spring-flowering herb. |
| fogfruit | an American flowering plant. |
| fouat fouet | the house-leek. |
| foxberry | the bearberry, a trailing plant of the heath family. |
| foxglove | a tall plant (genus Digitalis) with spikes of drooping (typically purple) bell-shaped flowers and leaves from which the drug digitalis was produced. |
| freesia | a garden flower. |
| frogbit | a kind of water-plant with roundish leaves and small white flowers. |
| fuchsia | a genus of flowering plants having elegant drooping flowers. [From Leonard Fuchs, a German botanist]. |
| fumitory | any pant of genus Fumaria, esp one used to treat scurvy. |
| funckia funkia | any plant of an Asiatic genus allied to the day-lilies, now called HOSTA. [From a German botanist]. |
| furcraea | a tropical American genus of plants related to the AGAVE. [From A. F. de Fourcroy (1755-1800), French chemist]. |
| galax | a heath-like evergreen plant of the southwestern US. |
| gallica | a variety of rose. |
| galtonia | a bulbous plant of the lily family native to Southern Africa. |
| gaywings | a perennial herb > GAYWINGS. N.B. no GAYWING*. |
| gazania | any plant of the genus Gazania, with bright orange or yellow flowers. [From Theodore of Gaza]. |
| gelsemium | a genus of climbing plants, with showy and deliciously fragrant flowers > GELSEMIUMS or GELSEMIA. [Ital. gelsemino, jasmine]. |
| genista | a genus of plants including the common broom of Western Europe. |
| genseng ginseng | a plant of the genus Aralia, the root of which is highly valued as a medicine among the Chinese. |
| gentian | any plant of the genus Gentiana, herbs, usually blue-flowered, abounding chiefly in alpine regions. |
| geranium | a plant of the genus Geranium with seed vessels like a crane's bill, typical of the family Geraniaceae; (loosely) any cultivated plant of the genus Pelargonium. |
| gerardia | any of a genus of often root-parasitic herbs of the snapdragon family. |
| gerbera | a genus of S. African plants. [From T.Gerber, German naturalist]. |
| germander | a plant of the genus Teucrium, of mintlike herbs and low shrubs. |
| gesneria gesneriad | a plant of a tropical American genus Gesneria. [From Konrad von Gesner, Swiss botanist and scholar]. |
| gessamine | jasmine. |
| geum | an avens, a plant of the Geum genus of the rose family. |
| gilcup giltcup | a buttercup. |
| gilliflower | a carnation. Also GILLYFLOWER. |
| gillyvor | a gillyflower, a carnation. |
| ginseng | see GENSENG. |
| gipsywort | a hairy Eurasian plant, Lycopus europaeus, having two-lipped white flowers with purple dots on the lower lip. |
| gladdie | gladiolus. |
| gladdon | an iris. |
| gladiola gladiole gladiolus | a lilylike plant of the genus Gladiolus, aka corn flag. The pl. of GLADIOLUS is GLADIOLUSES or GLADIOLI. |
| gladiolar | like a GLADIOLUS. |
| glasswort | a plant of salt marshes. |
| gloriosa | a genus of climbing plants with showy lilylike blossoms, natives of India. |
| gloxinia | a house plant with bright bell-shaped flowers. |
| goatsbeard | a Eurasian plant, Tragopogon pratensis, with woolly stems and large heads of yellow rayed flowers surrounded by large green bracts. |
| goatweed goutweed goutwort | an umbelliferous weed, long supposed to be good for gout. |
| godetia | any plant of the American genus Godetia, closely related to the evening primrose. [From C. H. Godet, Swiss botanist (died 1879)]. |
| goldenrod | a dark golden yellow flower. |
| goldenseal | a N. American ranunculaceous plant, with a yellow rhizome used in medicine. |
| goldilocks | a species of buttercup > GOLDILOCKSES. |
| goldthread | a North American woodland ranunculaceous plant, with slender yellow roots; the root of this plant, which yields a medicinal tonic and a dye. |
| gollan golland gowlan gowland | a name for various yellow flowers including marigold. |
| gool goold gule | dialect name for MARIGOLD. |
| goosefoot | a genus of herbs, mostly annual weeds. |
| goutweed | see GOATWEED. |
| goutwort | see GOATWEED. |
| gowan | a daisy. |
| gowaned | covered with GOWANS, daisies. |
| gowany | having, abounding in, or decked with, daisies. |
| gowlan | see GOLLAN. |
| gowland | see GOWLAN. |
| greenbrier | any of a genus of woody or herbaceous vines of the lily family. |
| greenweed | a name given to certain half-shrubby species of Genista. |
| grindelia | any coarse plant of the American genus Grindelia, with yellow daisy-like flower-heads. |
| gromwell | a wild flower. |
| guaco | any of several tropical American plants used as antidotes to snake-bites > GUACOS. |
| guarana | a Brazilian liana of the soapberry family; a paste prepared from the seeds of this shrub, used as a food or medicine and esp. to make a drink resembling coffee. [Port. f. Tupi guaran´.] |
| gule | see GOOL. |
| gumweed | a plant covered with a gummy substance. |
| gunnera | a large-leaved ornamental herb of the mare's-tail family. |
| gypsywort | a labiate plant of watersides, with deeply cut leaves and whorls of small white flowers. |
| haemony | in Milton, a plant 'of sovereign use against all enchantments'. |
| hairbell harebell | a wild flower with a blue bell-shaped flower. |
| hairif | the plant CLEAVERS. |
| halogeton | a coarse annual herb of the goosefoot family. |
| harakeke | flax. |
| hardheads | another name for KNAPWEED. |
| hardoke hordock | a plant, perhaps BURDOCK. |
| harebell | see HAIRBELL. |
| harmala harmel | the so-called African or Syrian rue, of the bean caper family. |
| hawkbit | a flower of the dandelion family. |
| hawkweed | any of the numerous microspecies of the genus Hieracium and Pilosella, of the composite family. |
| heathberry | any of various plants that have berry-like fruits and grow on heaths, such as the bilberry and crowberry. |
| hebe | a member of a genus of shrubby plants. [Gk. hebe, youth]. |
| hebenon hebona | anything e.g. a plant or fruit with a poisonous juice. |
| helenium | any plant of the genus Helenium, commonly with yellow flowers. |
| helianthus | any plant of the genus Helianthus, such as the sunflower and Jerusalem artichoke, typically having large yellow daisy-like flowers with yellow, brown, or purple centres. |
| heliconia | a tropical flowering plant. |
| hellebore | any of various early-flowering plants constituting the genus Helleborus, of the buttercup family. |
| hemlock | a highly poisonous umbelliferous plant with glaucous spotted stems, white flowers, and finely divided leaves. |
| hemp | a plant yielding a coarse fibre and an oil. |
| hempweed | a climbing plant. |
| henbane | a plant of the nightshade family with amber purple-streaked flowers, noted for its poisonous and narcotic properties. |
| henbit | either of two low-growing weeds with roundish shallowly lobed leaves. |
| henequen henequin heniquen heniquin | mexican agave, its leaf-fibre, used for cordage. |
| hepatica | a flower, aka LIVERWORT > HEPATICAE or HEPATICAS. |
| herbelet herblet | any small herb. |
| herbose herbous | abounding with herbs. |
| heuchera | a N. American plant with heart-shaped leaves and mostly red flowers. |
| hibiscus | any of numerous chiefly tropical herbaceous plants, shrubs, and trees of the genus Hibiscus > HIBISCUSES. [L. from Gk. ibiskos, marsh-mallow]. |
| hieracium | any plant of the genus Hieracium, the hawkweeds. |
| hioi | a plant of the mint family. |
| hoarhound horehound | a kind of wild flower. |
| hognut | another name for PIGNUT. |
| hogweed | a coarse umbellifer. |
| hollyhock | a plant (genus Althaea) of the mallow family. |
| hom homa | a sacred plant of the ancient Persians. Also HOMA. |
| honesty | a flower with silky round seed-pods. |
| honewort | an umbelliferous plant of the genus Sison, so called because it was used to cure a swelling called a HONE. |
| hoodia | a succulent S. African plant. |
| hordock | see HARDOKE. |
| horehound | see HOARHOUND. |
| hornwort | a rootless water-plant with much-divided submerged leaves. |
| horokaka | a low-growing New Zealand plant with fleshy leaves and pink or white flowers. |
| horsemint | a coarse American plant of the Mint family. |
| horsetail | a waterside plant. |
| horseweed | a common American weed of the composite family. |
| hosta | any plant of the liliaceous genus Hosta. [From Austrian botanist N. T. Host]. |
| houseleek | a plant of the leek family. |
| houstonia | a small North American plant with blue, white or purple flowers. |
| hoya | a plant of genus Hoya, the wax-plant. |
| hyacine | a hyacinth. |
| hyacinth | a bulbous genus of the lily family. |
| hydrastis | any of various Japanese and N. American plants, such as GOLDENSEAL, having showy foliage and ornamental red fruits. |
| hydrilla | an aquatic plant used as an oxygenator in aquaria and pools. |
| hyoscyamus | any plant of the solanaceous genus Hyoscyamus, of Europe, Asia, and N Africa, including HENBANE. |
| hypericum | a herbaceous plant or shrub. |
| hyssop | an aromatic bitter-tasting labiate herb native to the Mediterranean region, with spikes of small blue flowers. |
| iberis | any plant of the genus Iberis, including candytuft > IBERISES. |
| impatiens | a genus of plants, so called because the elastic capsules burst when touched, and scatter the seeds with considerable force. |
| imphee | any of several southern African varieties of sorghum. [Zulu imfe, sweet cane]. |
| incarvillea | any plant of the genus Incarvillea, of the family Bignoniaceae typically having trumpet-shaped flowers borne in clusters on erect stems. |
| inula | a kind of plant, aka ELECAMPANE > INULAS. |
| ipomoea | a genus of twining plants with showy monopetalous flowers, including the morning-glory, the sweet potato, and the cypress vine. [Gk. ipos, a worm, + homoiso, like]. |
| irid | any plant of the IRIS family. |
| ironweed | a tall weed with purplish flowers. |
| isoetes | a plant of the QUILLWORT genus. [Gk. isoetes, houseleek]. |
| itchweed | a plant, Indian poke. |
| ixora | a flowering plant, aka St. Rita and Maltese Cross. |
| jatropha | any plant of the genus Jatropha esp Jatropha curcas whose seeds yield an oil that can be used as a biofuel. |
| jessamy | jasmine; a dandy. |
| jewelweed | a plant of the touch-me-not genus with crimson-spotted yellow flowers. |
| jimpson jimson | as in jimson weed, a type of poisonous plant with white flowers and shiny fruits. No —S. |
| jointweed | an American wild plant. |
| jonquil | a Eurasian amaryllidaceous plant, Narcissus jonquilla with long fragrant yellow or white short-tubed flowers. |
| juncus | any plant of the genus Juncus, rushes > JUNCUSES. |
| kalanchoe | a succulent plant which bears red, yellow or pink clusters on long stems. |
| kali | the prickly saltwort or glasswort > KALIS. |
| kenaf | a fibre-yielding plant of E. Indies, aka AMBARY or AMBARI. |
| ketmia | as in bladder ketmia, a plant with yellow flowers and a bladder-like calyx. |
| kingcup | a meadow flower. |
| knapweed | any of several plants of the genus Centaurea, related to the thistles. |
| knawel knawe | a cornfield weed of the chickweed family. [Ger. Knauel]. |
| kniphofia | any plant of the Kniphofia genus, the red-hot poker. |
| knotgrass | any of several weeds of the genus Polygonum, with wiry jointed creeping stems and small pinkish or whitish flowers in the axils of the leaves. |
| knotweed | a pernicious weed of waterways. |
| kochia | any of several plants whose foliage turns dark red in summer. |
| korari | a native New Zealand flax plant, aka CLADDIE. |
| krubi krubut | an aroid tropical plant with an unpleasant smell. |
| kudzu | an ornamental papilionaceous plant of China and Japan. |
| ladino | a fast-growing clover > LADINOS. |
| larkspur | any of various ranunculaceous plants of the genus Delphinium, with spikes of blue, pink, or white irregular spurred flowers. |
| laserwort | any plant of the umbelliferous genus Laserpitium, the root of which yields a resinous substance of a bitter taste. |
| lathyrus | any plant of the Lathyrus genus, that includes sweet peas. |
| lavandin | a hybrid plant with blue or grey flowers, developed by crossing true lavender with spike lavender; an essential oil extracted from this plant. |
| lavatera | any plant of the genus Lavatera of the family Malvaceae, mallows. |
| leadplant | an American flower. |
| leadwort | a genus of maritime herbs with lead-colored spots on the leaves, and nearly lead-colored flowers. |
| ledum | a plant of the Labrador tea genus. |
| lespedeza | bush clover. [From Lespeder, Governor of East Florida]. |
| lewisia | a perennial herb with pink and white flowers. [From the American explorer Meriwether Lewis]. |
| liatris | a North American plant with small white flowers. |
| lilied | adorned with lilies. |
| lily | any plant or flower of the genus Lilium. |
| lilylike | like a lily. |
| linseed lintseed | lint or flax seed. |
| linum | a genus of herbaceous plants including the flax. |
| liriope | a grasslike plant. |
| lithops | a fleshy-leaved plant. |
| livelong | a kind of stone-crop, ORPINE. |
| liverleaf | a woodland plant. |
| lobelia | a garden flower. [From botanist Matthew de Lobel]. |
| locoplant locoweed | astragalus or other related plant, that drives cattle mad. |
| logania | any of a family of Australian plants related to the gentians. |
| loofa loofah luffa | a kind of vine: the fibrous gourd-like fruit is used as sponge. |
| lote | lotus. |
| lotos | lotus > LOTOSES. |
| lotus | any of various plants, including certain water-lilies. |
| lousewort | any plant of the genus Pedicularis, of the figwort family. |
| lovage | a kind of herb. |
| lovevine | a twining herb. |
| lucerne luzern | a fodder plant, alfalfa. |
| luffa | see LOOFA. |
| lunary | another name for the plant HONESTY. |
| lungwort | a wild flower with spotted leaves. |
| lupin lupine | any papilionaceous plant of the genus Lupinus. |
| luzern | see LUCERNE. |
| lychnis | a plant of the campion genus Lychnis of the pink family. [Gk. lychnis, rose-campion]. |
| mache | lamb's lettuce, corn-salad. |
| madwort | any of various plants believed to cure canine madness. |
| maguey | the century plant, a species of agave. |
| malanga | a tropical plant, aka Mantle of the Queen. |
| mallow | any of various plants of the family Malvaceae and esp. of the genus Malva, typically with hairy stems and leaves and deeply-cleft purple flowers. |
| malva | any plant of the mallow family. |
| mandrake | a poisonous and narcotic Mediterranean plant of the nightshade family. |
| mangemange | a climbing plant of S. Africa, aka Bushman's Mattress. |
| maranta | a genus of tropical plants that includes ARROWROOT. [From Bartollomeo Maranta, 16th-cent. Italian botanist]. |
| marigold | a composite plant of genus Calendulam with orange-yellow flowers. |
| marihuana marijuana | Indian hemp; its dried flowers or leaves smoked as an intoxicant. |
| mariposa | any of several liliaceous plants of the genus Calochortus, of the southwestern U.S. and Mexico, having brightly coloured tulip-like flowers. [Sp. mariposa, butterfly]. |
| marjoram | any of various labiate plants of the genus Origanum, aromatic herbs much used in cooking. |
| marshwort | a small umbelliferous marsh plant related to celery. |
| martagon | a kind of lily. |
| marybud | a marigold bud. |
| mashua | a tuber plant grown in the Andes. |
| matfelon matfellon | the greater knapweed. |
| matico | a Peruvian plant, allied to the pepper, the leaves of which are used as a styptic and astringent > MATICOS. |
| mayapple | an American plant, the egg-shaped fruit of this. |
| mayweed | a name for various plants including stinking camomile. |
| meadowsweet | a tall fragrant plant growing esp in watery meadows. |
| medaewart | an old name for MEADOWSWEET. |
| medick | a clover-like plant. |
| melampode | black hellebore, Helleborus orientalis. |
| melastome | a tropical flowering plant. No —S. |
| melilot | a wild flower. |
| meu | the plant SPIGNEL, aka MEUM or BALDMONEY. |
| milfoil | a yarrow, or other species of Achillea, with finely divided leaves. |
| milkweed | any of certain plants with milky juice, esp. sowthistle. |
| milkwort | a plant (genus Polygala) supposed by some to promote the production of milk in women. |
| miltonia | any of various epiphytic orchids of the tropical S. American genus Miltonia, bearing large brilliantly coloured flowers. |
| mimulus | any of various scrophulariaceous plants of the genus Mimulus, cultivated for their yellow or red flowers, aka monkey flower > MIMULUSES. [Gk. mimos, a mime, with L. diminutive suffix -ulus, from the grinning corolla]. |
| mint | any plant of the aromatic labiate genus Mentha; (verb) to coin, to invent. |
| mirabilis | a genus of plants, the marvel of Peru > MIRABILISES. |
| miterwort mitrewort | any plant of the genus Mitella, having slender, perennial herbs with a pod slightly resembling a bishop's miter. |
| monarda | a plant of the Monarda genus of N. American aromatic herbs of the mint family. [From N. Monardes (died 1588), Spanish botanist]. |
| moneywort | a trailing plant, with rounded opposite leaves and solitary yellow flowers in their axils. |
| monkshood | a plant of the genus Aconitum; aka ACONITE. |
| montbretia | a garden flower of a S. African iridaceous genus. |
| moonflower | a tropical flower, Calonyction aculeatum. |
| moonseed | a climbing plant of the genus Menispermum; -- so called from the crescent-like form of the seeds. |
| moonwort | a wild flower. |
| moorwort | a flower, aka bog rosemary, bog asphodel. |
| morelle | a flowering plant. |
| moschatel | a plant of the genus Adoxa, the flowers of which are pale green, and have a faint musky smell. |
| mousetail | any of various temperate ranunculaceous plants of the genus Myosurus. |
| mudwort | a small herbaceous plant growing on muddy shores. |
| mugwort | a temperate perennial herbaceous plant, Artemisia vulgaris, with aromatic leaves and clusters of small greenish-white flowers. |
| mullein mullen | any of various Mediterranean herbaceous plants of the scrophulariaceous genus Verbascum. |
| multiflora | a type of climbing rose having clusters of small flowers. |
| muskroot | a plant of the genus Adoxa, the flowers of which are pale green, and have a faint musky smell. Also MOSCHATEL. |
| myosote myosotis | a genus of flower, forget-me-not. [Gk. myosotis, mouse-ear, from its furry leaves, from mys, myos a mouse, + ous, otos an ear]. |
| narcissus | any of numerous bulbous spring-flowering plants of the genus Narcissus > NARCISSI or NARCISSUSES. |
| nard | an East Indian plant of the valerian family, used from remote ages in Oriental perfumery; an ointment made from this; (verb) to anoint with nard. |
| nardine | of or pertaining to NARD; having the qualities of nard. |
| nardoo | an Australian name for Marsilea drummondii, a four-leaved aquatic plant related to the ferns, sometimes used for food. |
| navelwort | a perennial succulent herb, having round, peltate leaves with a central depression; aka PENNYWORT. |
| neckweed | an American annual weed, with small white flowers and a roundish pod. |
| nelumbium nelumbo | a plant of the Nelumbium genus of waterlilies that includes the sacred lotus. The pl. of NELUMBO is NELUMBOS. |
| nemesia | a garden flower. [Gk. nemesion, a kind of catchfly]. |
| nemophila | a plant of a N. American genus of garden annuals. |
| nenuphar | a white or yellow water-lily. |
| nep | catmint. |
| nepeta | any of various labiate plants of the genus Nepeta. [L. nepeta, calamint]. |
| nerine | a S. African plant related to the AMARYLLIS. [L. nerine, a nereid]. |
| nettle | any of various common weeds (genus Urtica) with stinging hairs; (verb) to annoy. |
| nettly | like a nettle > NETTLIER, NETTLIEST. |
| nicotiana | any plant of the tobacco genus Nicotiana, of the family Solanaceae. |
| nigella | a garden flower. [Fem. of L. nigellus, blackish, from niger black, from the plant's black seeds]. |
| nonsuch nonesuch | another name for black medick. |
| nopal | a Central American cactus plant, on which the cochineal insect feeds, and from which it is collected. [Nahuatl nopalli, cactus]. |
| nopalito | a small cactus. |
| oca | a South American wood sorrel, cultivated for its edible tubers. [Amer. Sp. f. Quechua ócca]. |
| oenothera | a type of S. American plant with yellow flowers that open in the evening. |
| oilseed | a kind of rape. |
| oncidium | an orchid of the tropical American genus Oncidium > ONCIDIUMS. |
| ongaonga | a New Zealand nettle with a severe or fatal sting > ONGAONGAS. |
| opuntia | a genus of cactaceous plants: the prickly pear, or Indian fig. [L. Opuntia (herba, plant) of Opus (Greek Opous), a town of Locris where Pliny said it grew]. |
| orach orache | a genus of the goosefoot family. The pl. in both cases is ORACHES. |
| orchid | any plant or flower of the Orchidaceae, a family of monocotyledons, including many tropical epiphytes. |
| orchis | any flower of the Orchis genus. [Gk. orkhis, testicle]. |
| oregano origan origane origanum | wild marjoram. |
| orpin orpine | a kind of stone-crop, aka LIVELONG. |
| orrice orris | the Florentine or other iris; its dried rootstock smelling of violets, used in perfumery. |
| orval | the wild flower clary. |
| oshac | the ammoniac plant. |
| ourali oorali ourari urali urari woorari woorali wourali woorara | the plant yielding curare. |
| oxalis | a plant of the wood-sorrel genus. [Gk. oxalis, from oxys, sharp or acid]. |
| oxeye | a wild chrysanthmemum with yellow disc and white rays. |
| oxlip oxslip | a flower like the cowslip. |
| oxtongue | any of several plants with rough tongue-shaped leaves. |
| paeony peony | any of various stout perennial herbaceous plants and shrubs constituting the genus Paeonia. |
| pagle paigle | a species of Primula, either the cowslip or the primrose. |
| palmiet | a S. African aloe-like riverside plant of the rush family. |
| pance paunce pawnce | the pansy. |
| pansied | full of pansies. |
| pansy | a name for various species of violet. |
| parakeelya parakelia | a succulent Australian herb. |
| parataniwha | a New Zealand plant with pink and red serrated leaves. |
| pareira | a tropical climbing plant. |
| paris | a plant, herb Paris, once used as a narcotic > PARISES. |
| parsley | a bright-green umbelliferous herb (Carum petroselinum) with finely divided, strongly scented leaves, used in cookery. |
| paunce | see PANCE. |
| pawnce | see PANCE. |
| pearlwort | a name given to several low and inconspicuous herbs of the Chickweed family. |
| pellitory | a low, harmless weed of the nettle family. |
| pennyroyal | an aromatic herb. |
| pennywort | a perennial succulent herb, having round, peltate leaves with a central depression; aka NAVELWORT. |
| penstemon pentstemon | a genus of showy flowers. |
| penthia | another name for the unidentified plant ASTROPHEL. |
| peony | see PAEONY. |
| peperomia | a genus of subtropical herbaceous plants. |
| perilla | a genus of labiate herbs, of which one species is often cultivated for its purple or variegated foliage. |
| perpetual | a type of rose that flowers several times in one season. |
| perseline | purslane. |
| petunia | a S American genus of ornamental plants closely related to tobacco. [Tupi petun, tobaco]. |
| phacelia | any of various chiefly annual N. American plants, with clustered blue, violet, or white flowers, freq. grown for ornament. |
| phlomis | any plant of the Phlomis genus of labiate herbs > PHLOMISES. [Gk. phlomis, mullein] . |
| phlox | any plant of the N. American genus Phlox. [Gk. phlox, flame, wallflower]. |
| phormium | a tall New Zealand evergreen plant of the agave family, with sword-like leaves. |
| physalis | a plant of the Cape gooseberry genus > PHYSALISES. |
| pia | a tropical plant with a rhizome yielding E. India or Madagascar arrowroot. |
| picotee | a variety of carnation, with petal margins of different color. |
| pigface | a creeping succulent plant with brightly coloured flowers and red fruits. |
| pignut | an umbelliferous plant, aka EARTHNUT. |
| pigweed | a name of several annual weeds. |
| pilewort | a wild plant, used to treats piles. |
| pimpernel | a small red flower of waste ground. |
| pinedrops | a reddish herb of the United States, found parasitic on the roots of pine trees. N.B. no PINEDROP*. |
| pinesap | a reddish fleshy herb, formerly thought to be parasitic on the roots of pine trees, but more probably saprophytic. |
| pingrass | a European weed. |
| pinkroot | a flowering plant, aka WORMROOT. |
| pinweed | any plant of a genus of low North American herbs with branching stems, and very small and abundant leaves and flowers. |
| piny | a peony; (adj.) having e.g. the fragrance of pine > PINIER, PINIEST. |
| pioney piony | a peony. |
| pipewort | an aquatic or marsh herb with soft grass-like leaves. |
| pitahaya pitaya | a giant cactus of Central America. |
| plantain | any of various low-growing plants constituting the genus Plantago. |
| pogonia | a small orchid. |
| pokeberry | an American plant, a species of Phytolacca. |
| pokeroot pokeweed | an aromatic perennial herb of the United States. |
| polyantha | any of large number of dwarf hybrid roses. |
| polygala | any plant of the milkwort genus Polygala. |
| polygonum | any plant of the knot-grass family Polygonaceae. |
| polygony | any plant of the genus Polygonum. |
| pondweed | any plant of the genus Potamogeton. |
| poppied | covered with poppies. |
| poppy | a cornfield plant with large scarlet flowers; (adj.) like pop (music): POPPIER, POPPIEST. |
| portulaca | any plant of the PURSLANE family. |
| pothos | a climbing plant. No POTHO*. |
| primula | any of numerous usu. low perennial plants constituting the genus Primula. |
| protea | a plant of a large S. African genus. |
| puccoon | a plant with a red root and red sap, and bearing a pretty, white flower in early spring, aka BLOODROOT, REDROOT. [Algonquin]. |
| puha | sow-thistle. |
| pulsatilla | another name for PASQUEFLOWER. |
| purpie purpy | purslane, or perhaps brooklime. |
| purslain purslane | a pot herb and salad herb. |
| pusley pussley pussly | purslane. |
| pussytoes | a genus of composite herbs > PUSSYTOES. N.B. no PUSSYTOE*. |
| puttyroot | an American orchidaceous plant which flowers in early summer. |
| pyrethrum | a name still applied to various garden flowers, especially varieties of Chrysanthemum. |
| pyrola | any plant of the wintergreen genus. [Dim. of pyrus, pear, from the shape of the leaves]. |
| quamash | see CAMAS. |
| quillwort | an aquatic plant with hollow stems. |
| quinoa | a S. American goosefoot, with seeds used as rice. [Sp. spelling of Quechua kinua, kinoa.] |
| rafflesia | any of various stemless leafless parasitic plants, native to Java and Sumatra. |
| ragweed | any of various greyish N. American plants of the genus Ambrosia, of the composite family. |
| ragwort | a common coarse yellow-headed composite weed of pastures. |
| ramee rami ramie | rhea or China grass, a plant of the nettle family. |
| rampion | a wild flower, with a root used in salads. |
| ramson | a broad-leaved species of garlic. |
| ramtil ramtilla | a plant of the Indian subcontinent, cultivated for the oil pressed from the seeds. |
| raoulia | a New Zealand plant. |
| rattlebox | any of various tropical and subtropical plants with inflated seedpods within which the seeds rattle. |
| rauriki | sow-thistle. |
| reate | any of several kinds of water-crowfoot. |
| redleg | an arable weed. |
| redroot | a plant with a red root and red sap, and bearing a pretty, white flower in early spring, aka PUCCOON, BLOODROOT. |
| reseda | a flower, mignonette. |
| restharrow | a wild flower. |
| ribgrass | the ribwort plantain. |
| ribwort | a plantain with lanceolate prominently veined leaves, common in grassland. |
| richweed | a herb of the nettle family, having a smooth, juicy, pellucid stem. |
| ricinus | a genus of plants of the Spurge family, containing one species, the castor-oil plant. |
| riverweed | any plant of the genus Podostemon. |
| rocambole | a plant closely related to garlic. |
| rocket roquette | a kind of salad plant. |
| rodgersia | a flowering perennial herb. |
| roselike | like a rose. |
| rosemary | a small fragrant pungent Mediterranean labiate shrub. |
| roseroot | a fleshy-leaved herb, so called because the roots have the odor of roses. |
| rosinweed | the compass-plant, Silphium. |
| rudbeckia | a composite plant of the sunflower family. [From Olaf Rudbeck (1660-1740), Swed. botanist]. |
| rue | a plant with medicinal leaves; (verb) to regret. |
| ruellia | a plant of the acanthus family. [From the French botanist Jean Ruel (1479-1537)]. |
| rugosa | a type of rose. |
| ruscus | any plant of the genus Ruscus, that includes butcher's broom > RUSCUSES. |
| rushlike | resembling a rush; weak. |
| rushy | rushlike; full or made of rushes > RUSHIER, RUSHIEST. |
| sabadilla | see CEBADILLA. |
| safflower | a thistle-like plant yielding an orange dye. |
| sage | a garden labiate plant (Salvia officinalis) whose grey-green leaves are used as a flavouring; (adj.) wise > SAGER, SAGEST. |
| saguaro sahuaro | a kind of cactus > SAHUAROS. |
| sainfoin saintfoin | a leguminous plant, used as fodder. |
| salfern | a wild flower, aka GROMWELL. |
| salicornia | any plant, such as glasswort, of the Salicornia genus of gooosefoots, found on salt marshes. |
| salsilla | a tropical plant. |
| saltwort | a plant, growing on sandy seashores. |
| salvia | a genus of plants including sage. |
| samnitis | an unknown poisonous plant > SAMNITISES. |
| samphire sampire | a fleshy sea-coast plant; glasswort. |
| sandbur sandburr sandspur | an annual herb. |
| sandwort | any of various small white-flowered plants of the genus Arenaria and several related genera of the pink family. |
| sanicle | a wild flower, with astringent properties. [Gr. sanus, healthy]. |
| santonica | the dried unexpanded flower-heads of a species of wormwood. |
| saponaria | a genus of flowers, aka SOAPWORT. |
| satinflower | another name for the greater stitchwort. |
| satinpod | a flower, aka HONESTY. |
| saulge | an old name for SAGE. |
| savory | a kind of herb; (adj.) (US) savoury > SAVORIER, SAVORIEST. |
| saxifrage | a kind of rock plant. |
| scabiosa scabious | any wild flower of genus Scabiosa. [L. scabiosus, from scabies, the itch]. |
| scammoniate | of or like SCAMMONY, a species of bindweed or convolvulus. |
| scammony | a species of bindweed or convolvulus. [Gk. skammonia]. |
| scilla | any plant of the squill genus. [L. scilla, sea onion]. |
| scindapsus | any plant of the tropical Asiatic climbing genus Scindapsus, grown as greenhouse or house plants for their leathery heart-shaped variegated leaves. |
| seablite | a coastal plant. |
| seakale | a kind of maritime cabbage. |
| sedum | a genus of plants, mostly perennial, having succulent leaves and cymose flowers. [L. sedum, house-leek]. |
| sego | a liliaceous plant of Western North America, and its edible bulb. [Ute]. |
| selfheal | a plant with blue flowers. |
| semsem | sesame. [Arabic simsim]. |
| senecio | any plant of the genus Senecio, that includes groundsels and ragworts. [L. senecio, old man, groundsel, in ref. to the plant's white pappus]. |
| sengreen | the houseleek. |
| senna | the leaves of several leguminous plants of the genus Cassia, used as a cathartic medicine. [Arabic sana]. |
| sesame | a plant native to SE Asia, producing seeds used as food and yielding an edible oil. |
| seseli | a kind of umbelliferous plant > SESELIS. |
| setuale | see CETYWALL. |
| setwall | see CETYWALL. |
| shamrock | the national emblem of Ireland, a trifoliate leaf or plant. |
| shaya | see CHAY. |
| shinleaf | a perennial herb > SHINLEAFS or SHINLEAVES. |
| shiso | an Asian plant with aromatic leaves that are used in cooking > SHISOS. |
| shoreweed | a plant of the plantain family, found on lakesides. |
| shortia | an American herb. |
| sida | any plant of the Queensland hemp genus Sida, of the mallow family. |
| sidalcea | a plant of the genus Sidalcea of the mallow family. |
| silene | a flowering plant of the genus Silene, including the campions and catchfly. |
| silkweed | another name for MILKWEED. |
| silphium | a plant imported by the Greeks from Cyrenaica and used as a foodstuff and in medicine > SILPHIA or SILPHIUMS. [L. from Gk. silphion]. |
| silverweed | a creeping plant with silvery leaves and yellow flowers. |
| sinningia | one of a family of Brazilian plants that includes gloxinia. |
| sinsemilla | a plant yielding marijuana. |
| skirret | a water parsnip with edible roots. |
| skunkweed | a low-growing fetid swamp plant of N. America. |
| slinkweed | rosebay willow-herb or other flower believed to make cattle slink, i.e. give birth prematurely. |
| slipperwort | another name for CALCEOLARIA. |
| smartweed | an acrid plant which produces smarting if applied where the skin is tender. |
| smilax | a genus of perennial climbing plants, usually with a prickly woody stem. |
| snakemouth | a N. American orchid. |
| snakeroot | bistort, milkwort, or any other plant whose root has been thought good for snakebites. |
| snakeweed | a plant with a twisted astringent root, aka BISTORT. |
| snakewood | an East Indian climbing plant having a bitter taste, and supposed to be a remedy for the bite of the cobra, aka LETTER-WOOD. |
| snapdragon | a garden flower, aka ANTIRRHINUM. |
| snapweed | a flowering plant of the US. |
| sneezewort | a herbaceous plant allied to the yarrow, having a strong, pungent smell. |
| snowdrop | a drooping white flower of early spring. |
| soaproot | a perennial herb the root of which is used in Spain as a substitute for soap. |
| soapwort | a tall herb (Saponaria officinalis, or other species) of the pink family, whose roots and leaves contain saponin. |
| sola solah shola | an Indian plant with a pith used in making tropical hats, aka SPONGEWOOD. |
| solanum | any herbaceous plant of the genus Solanum, incl the potato, bittersweet and certain nightshades. |
| solidago | a flower, goldenrod > SOLIDAGOS. |
| sotol | any of several desert plants of the agave family, native to south-western N. America. |
| sourock | sorrel. |
| sowbread | a kind of cyclamen, so called because its tubers are eaten by pigs. |
| sparaxis | a S. African iridaceous plant with star-like flowers and lacerated spathes > SPARAXISES. [LL, from Gk. sparassein, to tear, lacerate]. |
| spearmint | a common garden mint used in cooking and flavouring. |
| spearwort | a name given to several species of crowfoot which have spear-shaped leaves. |
| speedwell | any species of the scrophulariaceous genus Veronica, typically blue-flowered. |
| spicknel spignel | an umbelliferous herb having finely divided leaves, common in Europe; aka BALDMONEY and MEU. |
| spiraea spirea | a group of plants, including hardhack, and meadowsweet. [Gk. speiraia, privet]. |
| spongewood | an Indian plant with a pith used in making tropical hats. |
| sprekelia | a bulbous plant grown for its striking crimson or white pendent flowers. |
| spurge | a plant of genus Euphorbia, usually having a milky juice which yields powerful emetic and cathartic products. |
| spurrey spurry | an annual herb with whorled filiform leaves, sometimes grown for fodder. SPURRY is also an adjective: spur-like. No comp, but there is a noun SPURRIER, one who makes spurs. |
| squawroot | a scaly parasitic plant found in oak woods in the United States. |
| squill | sea onion, used as expectorant, etc. |
| squinancy | a wild plant believed to cure quinsy. |
| stachys | any labiate plant of the genus Stachys. [Gk. stachys, ear of corn]. |
| stapelia | any of various succulent southern African plants constituting the genus Stapelia. [From the Dutch botanist J. B. van Stapel (d 1636)]. |
| staragen | the tarragon plant. |
| starwort | any plant of the genus Aster. |
| statice | sea lavender. [L. statice, thrift, from Gk. statike]. |
| stickseed | any of various weedy herbs of the borage family. |
| stickweed | any of several plants, such as beggar's lice, with adhesive seeds. |
| stinkweed | any foul-smelling plant. |
| stitchwort | a plant of the chickweed genus. |
| stokesia | a perennial herb. |
| stonecrop | a yellow flower of rockeries etc. |
| stonewort | any plant of the Characeae (from the limy crust); stone parsley. |
| stramony stramonium | thorn apple, and its leaves used in medicine. |
| strapwort | a seaside plant of the pink family. |
| strawflower | any Australian composite flowering plant of the genus Helichrysum. |
| succory | chicory. |
| sumpweed | a marsh plant. |
| sunchoke | the Jerusalem artichoke, a type of sunflower. |
| sundew | an insectivorous bog-plant. |
| sundrops | an American evening primrose with flowers that open at sunset. N.B. no SUNDROP*. |
| sunflower | a composite plant (genus Helianthus) or its large head with yellow rays and edible seeds from which an oil is extracted. |
| sunn | an E. Indian plant with tough fibre used in cordage. |
| superweed | a hybrid plant that contains genes for herbicide resistance. |
| swallowwort | a kind of vine with brownish-purple flowers. |
| tagetes | a garden flower. [L. Tages, an Etruscan god]. N.B. no TAGETE*. |
| tampala | an annual herb. |
| tansy | a kind of flower. |
| taraxacum | a plant of the dandelion genus. |
| tarragon | a kind of herb. [Arabic tarkhan]. |
| tarweed | a resinous, composite Californian plant. |
| teaberry | wintergreen; the wintergreen berry. |
| teasel teazel teazle | a plant of the genus Dipsacus, with prickly flowers; (verb) to raise a nap with teazel > TEASELED or TEASELLED; TEAZELED or TEAZELLED; TEAZLED. |
| teel til | the sesame plant. |
| thale | as in thale cress, a cruciferous wall plant. |
| thickleaf | any of various succulent plants of the genus Crassula > THICKLEAVES. |
| thimbleweed | any of various anemones with cylindrical seed heads. |
| thistle | a prickly composite plant with pink, white, yellow but usu purple flower-heads. |
| thistly | full of thistles > THISTLIER, THISTLIEST. |
| thrissel thristle | thistle. |
| thyme | any member of the labiate genus Thymus. |
| tidytips | a California composite plant, the flower of which has yellow rays tipped with white > TIDYTIPS. N.B. no TIDYTIP*. |
| til | see TEEL. |
| tillandsia | any plant of the mainly epiphytic tropical American genus Tillandsia of the pineapple family. |
| timbo | a S. American sapindaceous climbing plant > TIMBOS. |
| tithonia | a small herb. |
| toadflax | a plant of the figwort family, resembling a snapdragon. |
| toothwort | a plant whose roots are fancied to resemble teeth, as certain plants of the genus Lathraea, and various species of Dentaria. |
| tormentil | a small POTENTILLA of heaths and moors having four-petalled yellow flowers and strongly astringent roots. |
| trefoil | a three-leaved plant; a three-lobed architectural ornament. |
| trifolium | any leguminous plant of the large genus Trifolium, characterized by trifoliate leaves. |
| trifoly | sweet trefoil. |
| trillium | a genus of liliaceous plants; the three-leaved nightshade; -- so called because all the parts of the plant are in threes. |
| tritoma | a flowering plant, aka KNIPHOFIA. |
| tritonia | a S. African iridaceous plant. |
| trollius | the globeflower. |
| tuberose | a Mexican amaryllid with fragrant, creamy-white flowers. |
| tule | a large American bulrush. [Sp. f. Nahuatl tollin, tullin]. |
| tulip | any plant or flower of the bulbous liliaceous genus Tulipa, with showy, usu solitary, flowers. |
| tuliplike | like a TULIP. |
| turnsole | heliotrope; -- so named because its flowers are supposed to turn toward the sun. |
| tutsan | any of several plants credited with healing properties, esp. a St John's wort with large aromatic leaves and a berry-like fruit, aka PARKLEAVES. |
| twayblade | any one of several orchidaceous plants which have only two leaves, as the species of Listera and of Liparis. |
| udo | a Japanese plant with edible shoots > UDOS. |
| urali | see OORALI. |
| urari | see OORALI. |
| urena | any plant of the tropical genus Urena of the mallow family, yielding a jute substitute. [Malayalam uren]. |
| urtica | any plant of the nettle genus > URTICAS. |
| valerian | a flower; its roots are used as sedative. |
| valeric | relating to VALERIAN. |
| vanda | a tropical orchid. [Hindi vanda, mistletoe]. |
| venidium | a plant native to S. America with yellow or cream flowers. |
| veratrum | a genus of coarse liliaceous herbs having very poisonous qualities > VERATRUMS. [L. veratrum, hellebore]. |
| verbascum | another name for MULLEIN. |
| verbena | a plant of the VERVAIN genus. [L. verbena, a leafy twig, sacred bough]. |
| veronica | any of several herbs of the speedwell genus. |
| vervain verven | a wild verbena, believed to have magical powers. |
| vetch | any of a number of leguminous flowers. |
| vetchling | any small leguminous plant of the genus Lathyrus, especially L. nissolia. |
| vetchy | consisting of vetches or of pea straw > VETCHIER, VETCHIEST. |
| vinca | a genus of plant, including periwinkle. |
| vinelike | like a VINE. |
| violet | any plant or flower of the genus Viola. |
| viscaria | any plant of the Eurasian perennial genus Viscaria > low-growing, with pink, white, or purple flowers. |
| wald weld | a scentless species of MIGNONETTE, yielding a yellow dye. WELD is also a verb: to join two pieces of metal by fusing. |
| wallwort | dwarf elder, aka DANEWORT. |
| wartwort | a name given to several plants thought to be a cure for warts. |
| waterleaf | any plant of the American genus Hydrophyllum, herbs having white or pale blue bell-shaped flowers > WATERLEAFS. |
| waterlily | a name commonly given to the different species of Nymphaea and Nuphar. |
| waterweed | any plant with very small flowers and leaves growing in ponds, etc, esp ANACHARIS. |
| waxflower | any of various plants with waxy flowers. |
| waxplant | any of several plants of the genus Hoya, with clusters of waxy white or pink flowers. |
| waxweed | an annual herb. |
| waybread | the common dooryard plantain. |
| william | as in sweet william, a flowering plant. |
| willowherb | a perennial herb of the evening primrose family with willow-like leaves and seeds. |
| wincopipe | a little red flower, probably the scarlet pimpernel. |
| wintergreen | an aromatic plant of genus Pyrola, yielding a stimulant oil. |
| wistaria wisteria | an ornamental climbing plant. [From Caspar Wistar (or Wister) (1761-1818), US anatomist]. |
| witchweed | a yellow-flowered plant of the snapdragon family. |
| withwind withywind | bindweed or other climbing plant. |
| woad | a broad-leafed plant yielding a blue dye. |
| woadwax woodwax woodwaxen woadwaxen | dyer's greenweed. |
| wolfsbane | a kind of aconite. |
| woodroof woodruff | a small herb having a pleasant taste, sometimes used for flavoring wine. |
| woodwax | see WOADWAX. |
| woodwaxen | see WOADWAX. |
| woorali | see OORALI. |
| woorara | see OORALI. |
| woorari | see OORALI. |
| wormroot | a flowering plant, aka PINKROOT. |
| wormseed | any one of several plants whose seeds have the property of expelling worms from the stomach and intestines. |
| wormwood | the bitter plant Artemisia absinthium, formerly used as a vermifuge. |
| woundwort | any of several plants popularly held to have wound-healing properties. |
| wourali | see OORALI. |
| xanthoxyl zanthoxyl | a plant of a genus of the rue family found in Brazil, in particular the prickly-ash or Hercules club. |
| yarr | the corn spurrey. |
| yarrow | a wild flower. |
| yautia | a tropical plant. |
| yellowweed | any of various yellow-flowered plants, such as the ragwort in Europe and some species of goldenrod in the U.S. |
| yellowwort | a wild flower. |
| yuca yucca | any plant of the genus Yucca of plants of the family Liliaceae, native to Mexico. |
| zanthoxyl | see XANTHOXYL. |
| zebrina | a trailing or creeping Central American plant. |
| zedoary | certain species of CURCUMA, native to the Indian subcontinent, China, etc, whose rootstocks are aromatic, bitter and pungent. |
| zingiber | any plant of the Zingiber or ginger family. [L. zingiber, from Gk. zingiberis, ginger]. |
| zinnia | a garden flower. |
| zygocactus | a kind of cactus, aka the Christmas cactus > ZYGOCACTI or ZYGOCACTUSES. |
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